Tag Archives: perspective

… like there is no tomorrow!

Often I hear people say “live like there is no tomorrow”.  I get the sentiment, but I don’t feel that this is a responsible thing to do as this is short term thinking at its best.  Every time that I have followed the no tomorrow philosophy, I wake up the next day with consequences on my hands.

I do suggest living each day like it is your last but from a place of love, not urgency.  There are simple things that I do each day like listening to the person in front of me, giving the people that I love too many hugs, laughing at myself and perhaps learning something new.  These are actions that I can do that will not leave me wishing I had died later that day.

I’d like to propose a different perspective.  This perspective when combine with the no tomorrow perspective from a place of love could change the world.  At least, I think so.

Imagine that you will live for another 1000 years and you know it.  Tomorrow will absolutely come another 364, 999 times.  How would you invest your time?  What would you get involved with?  What vision do you have for that future?  Will you continue leaving the future in the hands of others?  Would you take your time because “hey, who fucking cares?  I’m going to be here for a while and am in no rush.”  Would you continue to put up with gangs, wars, government or corporate lies/greed?  Would you keep working a desk job that you hate?  Would you take a year or two to really gain clarity on what you are to do with your life?  You might even begin to believe that you are here for a purpose and that your life is truly meaningful.

Honestly ask yourself these questions from that perspective.  At the same time, live each day as if you were going to die in your sleep that night and tell the people you love them that you love them.  Stand up to those who need to be checked.

I can assure of two things if you think like this…

1.  You will gain vision for the future and what makes sense for all life everywhere.

2.  The love that you feel will increase as you share yourself with those around you.

Hmmm, maybe there is something to this idea of giving what you seek to receive after all.


Thank God it’s Friday…

For some reason none of these dudes thought it was funny when I walked out in front of them naked with my arms stretched out like Jesus.   


Random thoughts again

1.  We should change the name of Monday to Dorisday because Monday sucks for most people and Doris Day is awesome.

2.  A group of crows is called a murder and a group of owls is called a parliament. 

3.  Knowing what a group of owls is called makes me think.  The global leaders meet once per year in Bohemian Grove up in California for the cremation of Care ritual and mock child effigy sacrifice to Molech (the owl god).  Maybe that’s why we call the places where they meet the rest of the time ’parliament buildings’?

Anyways, enough about old gay frat house weirdos frolicking in the red wood forest.  Back to randomness…

4.  If all matter in the universe was originally compressed into a speck the size of a grain of sand, then I have some questions.  

 a)  what was on the outside of that sand?  And don’t just say “nothing”!!!

 b)  How can we in our genius claim that it was the size of a grain of sand when there was apparently nothing else measurably relative to that grain of sand? 

c)  Can anyone successfully prove to me that we are not still in that grain of sand and that what we experience as the universe is just life in the speck?

5.  I was very very sad when I found out that my Schizophrenic friends weren’t real.

Here are links to other random thought posts:

Click me 1

Click me 2

Click me 3

Click me 4


I still haven’t found what I’m looking for?

This is a tandem post between two friends.  My friend Reid and I decided to write on the same topic during the same day in order to contrast and compare answers from two timeline vantage points. 

This post is my answer to the question:  ”have I found what I’m looking for?”  The idea came from our conversation about the U2 song, ‘I still haven’t found what I’m looking for’.  At the end of this post I will give you the link to Reids’ site so you can view the contrasting answer.    

My short answer to this question is no. 

However, I decided not to cop-out.  After asking myself this question, a new level of introspection and reflection on my desires arose.  At first, I became very grateful for the simple gift of my life.  I pondered friends, family, talents, experiences and even material things.  I’ve always seemed to have a deep appreciation for everyone and everything in my life yet, I walk about with a feeling of general dissatisfaction most of the time.  What’s up with that? 

I now feel that the reason for this is simple…  What I am looking for isn’t in this world.  Contentment for me is typically fleeting here on Earth.   Part of me believes that my life is like this so that I am compelled to keep looking, keep progressing, continue learning and growing. 

I choose not to fill the space this question invites with non-answers like love, peace, God or Jesus.  While there is much beauty in each of these contemplations, I’ve met people who claim they’ve found it and when they inevitably move past the facade, they are just like every other human… still seeking; still yearning.  We all seem to go about business as usual with this general anxiety that looms about.  Such is the uncertainty inherent with life.  

We are after all, a bunch of strange beings standing in a large grassy field looking up, looking down and looking all around saying “what the fuck is this all about?” while trying to make some sense of it.  Unless of course we have distracted ourselves enough not to think at all, not to mention any names… most people!  Yet regardless, we will eventually have to account for our life.       

The following is my final answer to the question that this tandem blog post proposes:  Have I found what I am looking for?

My sneaking suspicion is that what I am truly looking for is the entirety of my life and I will not get to see that until its final moment. 

At times I felt that it was somewhat cruel to release someone into the world, give them an inherent sense of a ’mission’ and then not tell them what that mission is.  It is up to each of us to find this or remember within ourself.  The danger in that process however, is that we tend to extract meaning based on our own experiential bias or perceptual filter at the best of times.  

I know that I came here to do something.  I just do not know what.   

If you see me standing on a street corner scratching my head with a contemplative look on my face, it is because I am attempting to remember what that something is. 

I tried using the power of deduction to find what I am looking for.  For example; I’m a musician, therefore I’m here to make music.  I’m a drummer, therefore I’m on Earth to facilitate drum groups.  I’m a writer, so I must write; and so on and so forth.  Every one of these attempts has revealed a little bit more of who I am and what I am capable of so it was all worth it. 

All of these attempts serve to affirm my sneaking suspicion that I am looking for the totality of my life and not just bits and pieces.     

In the meantime, I can learn to better accept life as it is; full of ups, downs, beauty and tragedy.  I can become a better human being by loving more, even if it hurts like hell at times.  I can open my self to new ideas about who I am and what I am capable of.  I can be free in any moment by realizing that it is all temporary and that without a doubt I will inevitably find what I am looking for.

Please check out www.readreidread.com for the contrasting answer.

Thank you.

Chris


Life…

I had a wonderful coffee meeting yesterday with my friend Reid from http://www.readreidread.com/.  Incredibly talented writer, spiritual ally and great friend.  He pointed out that his favorite sentence in one of my posts: Patience in evolution was “life is amazing”.  I felt that it is appropriate to elaborate upon this. 

Sometimes we forget that we are this unique conscious species spinning on a life covered planet seemingly in the middle of nowhere.  Everything in our quantum universe is so perfectly balanced that we get the rare opportunity to wake up in the morning and experience what we call ”our day”.  Every so often, in the midst of complaining about my cold Starbuck’s coffee or how the asshole driver in front of me is taking too long to accelerate when the light turns green; I stop and remind myself that life is in fact unbelievably amazing. 

I have travelled about this world a bit and have come to see beauty everywhere I go.  I love meeting new people and exploring new territory.  My friend Trevor once said that “life is as beautiful as it is tragic” and I would like to further point out that we get what we see.  If our mind is primed to see tragedy then we will see life as tragic.  While this issue of focus seems obvious we still tend toward auto-pilot.  For instance, when someone asks me how I am doing.  If I say “fantastic, everything is good” then they tend to say “that’s good”.  If I respond with ”terrible”, then the response is usually “why, what’s wrong?”.  Our monkey mind craves the gossip and drama.  Slowing down and appreciating everything requires very little effort.  

In an earlier post entitled “Humility” I stated that my current mantra was “I don’t know”.  This is still true but now it has an addendum…  I don’t know but life sure is amazing.  Rather than complaining that it’s snowing out again, I will contemplate how snow happens.  This isn’t going to happen all of the time though.  Sometimes there are just days where I feel like shit and I have a right to that experience too.  The point is that there is always room for improvement in regards to my optimism, empathy, compassion and capacity to love. 

Here is comedian Louis CK’s perspective

I’m grateful to be surrounded by such loving and supportive people.  At the times where life hands my ass to me, I can rest in the thought that I have huge resources of awesome to draw from. 

Life is amazing and I am blessed.  So are you. 

Celebrate that.


13 random thoughts

1.  People that talk to God are called ‘Religious’.

2.  People that God talks to are called ‘crazy’, or worse; gurus who write books. 

3.  People that talk to the government are protestors, media or lobbyists.

4.  People that the government talks to are typically in trouble for something. 

5.  In a loan transaction both parties (the banker and borrower) enter with empty pockets.  One party leaves with a debt liability and the other holds a securities asset.  Good times if you’re the banker.

6.  Human inter-action and connectivity is the new economy.

7.  Life is NOT like a box of chocolate because sometimes it gets hot out and then everything would just melt leaving nothing but nuts and brown liquid.   Gross.  And besides, when did we start taking advice from retards?

8.  Creative animals have the innate ability to facilitate heaven or hell on any given planet.  Where’s your head at?

9.  The very act of ‘believing’ in something creates a duality thereby separating you from the very thing in which you believe.  It’s better to do your best to BE the thing.

10.  Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada is poised to become the central distribution hub for the future North American Union.  Which also may be complete bullshit… just like the European Union right?  That was complete bullshit at one point in history.

11.  None of the Beatles merchandise was released on Itunes, Rock band or any other medium until the holder of the publishing rights a.k.a. Michael Jackson mysteriously died.  Two weeks later… BAM… beatle mania once again.  Just sayin.

12.  How many people enter the field of psychology or psychiatry in order to intellectually offset the need to work through their own mental-emotional issues?

13.  There are 13 moons in a given trip around our sun.  The original measurement of this is called a “moonth”.  Now called month with an inaccurate catholic time measurement system that hides* the 13th moon. 

*Probably due to the fact that a multitude of superstitious idiots drive the assumption based information economy.


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